"One of the most interesting discoveries I've seen in animal
sociobiology in years." --E.O. WilsonWhy do ravens, generally understood
to be solitary creatures, share food between each other during winter?
On the surface, there didn't appear to be any biological or evolutionary
imperative behind the raven's willingness to share. The more Bernd
Heinrich observed their habits, the more odd the bird's behavior became.
What started as mere curiosity turned into an impassioned research
project, and Ravens In Winter, the first research of its kind, explores
the fascinating biological puzzle of the raven's rather unconventional
social habits. "Bernd Heinrich is no ordinary biologist. He's the sort
who combines formidable scientific rigor with a sense of irony and an
unslaked, boyish enthusiasm for his subject, and who even at his current
professorial age seems to do a lot of tree climbing in the line of
research." --David Quammen, The New York Times